I was searching for javascript reflection with google and found your article.

I am not really shure if we both have the same understanding what javascript reflection is, but I found a very simple approach that resolves my javascript reflection problems... maybe you are interested in that

In the web application I am currently creating, I needed to send an AJAX reply that invokes a javascript funktion which exists in the main html page. I thought that this can only be done via javascript reflection, means I am not directly calling a method, instead I send a simple string and that "reflects" the method call. In my application my php scripts now e.g. sends a "@alert('generic reflection proxy')" string. The javascript that requested the site just makes a call to "setTimeout" with the substring after the '@' symbol.

I am not really shure if we both have the same understanding what javascript reflection is, but I found a very simple approach that resolves my javascript reflection problems... maybe you are interested in that

In the web application I am currently creating, I needed to send an AJAX reply that invokes a javascript funktion which exists in the main html page. I thought that this can only be done via javascript reflection, means I am not directly calling a method, instead I send a simple string and that "reflects" the method call. In my application my php scripts now e.g. sends a "@alert('generic reflection proxy')" string. The javascript that requested the site just makes a call to "setTimeout" with the substring after the '@' symbol.